03383oam 22006014a 450 991051143240332120170922081342.0963-386-240-X963-386-080-6(CKB)3710000000912766(MiAaPQ)EBC4809863(OCoLC)961187680(MdBmJHUP)muse53158(EXLCZ)99371000000091276620150211d2015 uy 0engurcnu||||||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierJewish life in Austria and Germany since 1945identity and communal reconstructions /Susanne Cohen-WeiszNew York :Central European University Press,2015.Baltimore, Md. :Project MUSE, 2016©2015.1 online resource (426 pages) illustrations, tables"Based on published primary and secondary materials and oral interviews with some eighty communal and organizational leaders, experts and scholars, this book both provides a comparative systematic account of the reconstruction of Jewish communal life in Germany and Vienna (representing 98% of Austrian Jewry) after 1945 as it developed over the next six decades, and explains the process of communal reconstruction, and its outcomes in the two countries. In particular, it focuses on the similarities and differences between the communities in regard to their political, social, institutional and identity developments, and their members' changing attitudes toward and relationship with the surrounding societies, and seeks to show how these developed in diverse national political circumstances and varying governmental policies. It will eventually prove that more influential than national politics were domestic Jewish development processes - especially changes in Jewish group identity, which shapes not only the Jewish community itself but also its view of the gentile world and its interaction with it at the national level. The comparative perspective is then broadened to reveal the key variables and their pattern of influence responsible for the developments of and within the European Jewry and European-Jewish organizations"--Provided by publisher.963-386-079-2 Includes bibliographical references and index.JewsAustriaIdentityHistory20th centuryJewsAustriaViennaSocial conditions20th centuryJewsAustriaViennaHistory20th centuryJewsGermanyIdentityHistory20th centuryJewsGermanySocial conditions20th centuryJewsGermanyHistory1990-JewsGermanyHistory1945-1990AustriaEthnic relationsGermanyEthnic relationsElectronic books. JewsIdentityHistoryJewsSocial conditionsJewsHistoryJewsIdentityHistoryJewsSocial conditionsJewsHistoryJewsHistory305.892/4043Cohen-Weisz Susanne1066556MdBmJHUPMdBmJHUPBOOK9910511432403321Jewish life in Austria and Germany since 19452549417UNINA01525nam a2200349 i 4500991001851959707536121012s2010 riua b 100 0 eng d9780821848098b1408093x-39ule_instDip.to Matematica e Fisicaeng51522AMS 30CAMS 30HAMS 30JAMS 37FLC QA331.7.W56Winter School on Complex Analysis and Operator Theory<2nd :2008 :Sevilla, Spain>477608Five lectures in complex analysis :second Winter School on Complex Analysis and Operator Theory, February 5-9, 2008, University of Sevilla, Sevilla, Spain /Manuel D. Contreras, Santiago Dâiaz-MadrigalProvidence, R. I. :American Mathematical Society ;[Spain] :Real Sociedad Matematica Espanola,c2010xiii, 161 p. :ill. ;26 cmContemporary mathematics,0271-4132 ;525Includes bibliographical referencesFunctions of complex variablesCongressesMathematical analysisCongressesContreras, Manuel D.Diaz-Madrigal, Santiago.b1408093x02-04-1412-10-12991001851959707536LE013 30C CON11 (2010)12013000216928le013pE58.00-l- 01010.i1545512909-11-12Five lectures in complex analysis240499UNISALENTOle01312-10-12ma -engriu0003136nam 22004215 450 991025270660332120200707002905.03-658-18979-710.1007/978-3-658-18979-2(CKB)4340000000061953(DE-He213)978-3-658-18979-2(MiAaPQ)EBC4917563(EXLCZ)99434000000006195320170718d2017 u| 0engurnn|008mamaatxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierArticulating Novelty in Science and Art The Comparative Technography of a Robotic Hand and a Media Art Installation /by Julian Stubbe1st ed. 2017.Wiesbaden :Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden :Imprint: Springer VS,2017.1 online resource (XII, 245 p. 30 illus.) "Research"--Cover.3-658-18978-9 Includes bibliographical references.Novelty and technological objects -- Three articulations of novelty: identity, form, and difference -- The aesthetic reflexivity of material practice.Julian Stubbe aims at characterizing what novelty is in the becoming of objects and how the new becomes part of a shared reality. The study’s method is comparative and concerned with technological practice in science as well as in art. It draws on a detailed comparison of two cases: the becoming of a robotic hand made from silicon, and the genesis of a media art installation that renders visible changes in the earth’s magnetic field. In contrast to the canon of sociological innovation studies, which regard novelty as what actors in the field label as new or innovation, the author attempts to delineate certain shifts in an object’s becoming that individuate an object and render its difference visible. This entails attending the enactment of novelty through cultural imaginaries and narratives about technologies, as well as acknowledging the shifts in technical forms that make loose elements enter a new kind of circularity. From this perspective, novelty is an articulation: when differences are not contradicting, but when differing characteristics are aligned, fitted, and click in so as to appear and behave as a distinct entity. Contents • Novelty and technological objects • Three articulations of novelty: identity, form, and difference • The aesthetic reflexivity of material practice Target Groups • Lecturers and students of sociology, especially of sociology of technology  The Author Dr. Julian Stubbe currently works as scientific consultant in the field of demographic change and future research.SociologyKnowledge - Discoursehttps://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/X22120Sociology.Knowledge - Discourse.306.42Stubbe Julianauthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut1063785BOOK9910252706603321Articulating Novelty in Science and Art2534599UNINA